## Changes
The `any` alias for `interface{}` has been around since Go 1.18.
Now that we're using golangci-lint (#1953), we can lint on it.
Existing commits can be updated with:
```
gofmt -w -r 'interface{} -> any' .
```
## Tests
n/a
## Changes
I took the examples from https://yaml.org/spec/1.2.2.
The required modifications to the loader are:
* Correctly parse floating point infinities and NaN
* Correctly parse octal numbers per the YAML 1.2 spec
* Treat "null" keys in a map as valid
## Tests
Existing and new unit tests pass.
## Changes
If not explicitly quoted, the YAML loader interprets a value like
`2024-08-29` as a timestamp. Such a value is usually intended to be a
string instead. Our normalization logic was not able to turn a time
value back into the original string.
This change boxes the time value to include its original string
representation. Normalization of one of these values into a string can
now use the original input value.
## Tests
Unit tests in `libs/dyn/convert`.
## Changes
This PR changes the location metadata associated with a `dyn.Value` to a
slice of locations. This will allow us to keep track of location
metadata across merges and overrides.
The convention is to treat the first location in the slice as the
primary location. Also, the semantics are the same as before if there's
only one location associated with a value, that is:
1. For complex values (maps, sequences) the location of the v1 is
primary in Merge(v1, v2)
2. For primitive values the location of v2 is primary in Merge(v1, v2)
## Tests
Modifying existing merge unit tests. Other existing unit tests and
integration tests pass.
---------
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
With https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/1507 and
https://github.com/databricks/cli/pull/1511 we are clarifying the
semantics associated with `dyn.InvalidValue` and `dyn.NilValue`. An
invalid value is the default zero value and is used to signals the
complete absence of the value.
A nil value, on the other hand, is a valid value for a piece of
configuration and signals explicitly setting a key to nil in the
configuration tree. In keeping with that theme, this PR returns
`dyn.InvalidValue` instead of `dyn.NilValue` at error sites. This change
is not expected to have a material change in behaviour and is being done
to set the right convention since we have well-defined semantics
associated with both `NilValue` and `InvalidValue`.
## Tests
Unit tests and integration tests pass. Also manually scanned the changes
and the associated call sites to verify the `NilValue` value itself was
not being relied upon.
## Changes
Before this change maps were stored as a regular Go map with string
keys. This didn't let us capture metadata (location information) for map
keys.
To address this, this change replaces the use of the regular Go map with
a dedicated type for a dynamic map. This type stores the `dyn.Value` for
both the key and the value. It uses a map to still allow O(1) lookups
and redirects those into a slice.
## Tests
* All existing unit tests pass (some with minor modifications due to
interface change).
* Equality assertions with `assert.Equal` no longer worked because the
new `dyn.Mapping` persists the order in which keys are set and is
therefore susceptible to map ordering issues. To fix this, I added a
`dynassert` package that forwards all assertions to `testify/assert` but
intercepts equality for `dyn.Value` arguments.
## Changes
The name "dynamic value", or "dyn" for short, is more descriptive than
the opaque "config". Also, it conveniently does not alias with other
packages in the repository, or (popular ones) elsewhere.
(discussed with @andrewnester)
## Tests
n/a